List of Articles for Zurich

Gay Zurich

Gay Zurich

Emergency measures in the wake of Covid-19:

The Swiss Federal Council announced the closure of bars, restaurants, shops and gathering places except grocery stores, pharmacies, public transport and the postal service on March 16th. Events were cancelled or postponed.

As of June 19 the state of emergency will officially end, and most lockdown restrictions will be dropped. Groups of up to 30 people will again be allowed to meet in public places from May 30th. From June 6th, groups of up to 300 people will be allowed for private events and ceremonies, theater performances and film screenings, so long as people keep a distance of two meters. Nightclubs, bars and pubs will have to close at midnight.

Complete freedom of movement will be restored in and out of Switzerland by July 6th, but some border controls will be relaxed earlier, with border controls to Germany, Austria and France to lift by June 15th. From June 6th, brothels and sex work will again be allowed. Events with more than 1,000 people are banned until August 31st.

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The largest, most affluent city in Switzerland, Zurich has long ranked among the world's best cities in terms of quality of life. It takes just a day or two of walking the pedestrian-only shopping districts, relaxing at the sidewalk cafes, or getting safely around town on the ubiquitous trams to feel quite at home.

On the surface, Switzerland is quite neatly divided, almost balkanized, into its German, French and Italian pieces. The marriage has it's squabbles, but the Confederation endures, officially dating from August 1, 1291, it has kept Switzerland safe in it's mountainous redoubt, out of much of the warfare that has ravaged Europe since then. English is spoken by almost everyone, as a second language.

Much of the city’s relaxed spirit focuses on the water. Zurich is situated on a lake entirely surrounded by lush parks. Fresh, clear water flows into the lake from glaciers in the Alps, which provide a picturesque backdrop to the city. Boats are plentiful. The Limmat, the river that flows from the lake through the historic city centre, is banked by pedestrian promenades with outdoor bars and cafés.

Getting Here

Zürich Airport is one of the busiest in the world. It’s located about 7 miles north of the city. Swiss International Airlines, the national airline, is exactly what you’d expect from its namesake: an efficient and comforting way to make your way across the ocean. Service is engaging and details are well managed. Tyler Brûlé, the gay founder of Wallpaper and Monocle magazines, oversaw the airline’s makeover a few years back

Getting to the center is easy with trains that take ten minutes to travel to Zurich main station, with departures every ten minutes during peak periods. This is the best link for anyone staying at the city center. Inter-city and regional trains connect to all main towns and cities in Switzerland. See SBB, or the airport link, for schedules and information on discount cards if you're planning to travel beyond Zurich. The Glattalbahn tram service (number 10) departs every 7-15 minutes for other surrounding areas, and there are also regional bus services.

Getting Around

ZVV operates the public transit system for Zurich with S-Bahn trains, buses, trams and boats to get you around; even a funicular and cable car. No city in the world, it's said, has as much access to near and frequent rides, wherever and whenever, as here in Zurich. There are many pass plans, from single to six day unlimited, or multiple journey tickets, or group fares, or after-9am rates - with various zone and class upgrades.

A 24-hour ZürichCARD costs 27 CHF, good for all modes (even a short cruise), and it includes free admission to most museums, discounts at local stores and city tours, plus some extras at many restaurants. For 53 CHF you get 72 hours of the same. Use of the nighttime network may require a an extra payment at a ticket machine. For more details Zuerich.com is a bit easier to use than the ZVV site.

Neighborhoods

Old Town. Much of Zurich's gay scene is in Altstadt, or Old Town, along and around the picture-postcard cobblestone streets and alleys around Niederdorf Strasse. Situated between Zurich University and the Limmat River, the area is full of cafes, bistros, restaurants, bookstores, and boutiques. It’s a short walk from the Hauptbahnhof, the city’s main train station. Besides being a transportation hub of trains, buses, and trams, this main station has an underground shopping center that's open on Sundays and holidays, when most other shops close.

Langstrasse. Many visitors may never get beyond old town, as there are so many things to see and do there, but a number of other gay businesses can be found around Langstrasse, a short distance from the tourist haunts. Great foreign cuisines and bargain shopping can be found hereabouts too.

The Swiss Franc (CHF) is the local currency for Switzerland (and neighboring Liechtenstein). Many businesses will also accept euros, but don’t count on it. Most US bank debit cards work in most ATMs here, but be sure to inform your bank of your travel plans before leaving home. If you can get a credit card with a chip and PIN number you'll be able to use your card more widely all over Europe - expecially with ticket machines. One CHF has ranged in value between 95 cents and one USD for most of the past three years.

Media and Resources

Many of the local gay print magazines have folded in recent years, but websites such as Swissgay,Gay.ch, and HAZ can keep you up to date. The social network site gaYmeBoys.com can help in making friends before you arrive.

Visit Zürich is one of the best online tourist resources for getting around this city.

MySwitzerland.com has a gay pages section along with general information in this official Swiss Tourism website.

The Platzhirsch Hotel & Bar (Spitalgasse 3), opened recently on Hirschenplatz where the Lobby Bar was; stylishly modern, rooms ranging from superior to economy, and lounge bar with smoking area, WiFi and bar with terrace seating.

For those on a budget City Backpacker / Hotel Biber (Niederdorfstrasse 5) offer good Swiss traditions at great prices, at heart of Old Town. Dorm beds as low as 37 CHF per night, single rooms from 77 CHF. Reserve in advance with credit card. Dorm rooms are mixed gender - showers are not.

Zurich Overnight (CF Meyerstrasse 25), gay B&B for for a single man or male couple, big breakfast, gourmet meals, WiFi, clothing-optional pool and sauna, near lake and public transport.

Out in Old Town & Bellevue

Barfüsser (Spitalgasse 14, Hirschenplatz), outdoor seating for early, mixed crowd. One of Europe's oldest gay bars, once a monastery, hence the name and wandering (barefoot) monk sign. Redesigned, bright, modern bar, sushi restaurant, lounge with DJ. Gayest Friday and Saturday nights, a popular place to meet before the dance clubs.

Tip Top Bar (Seilergraben 13), aka Petra's, mostly older male crowd, welcoming local "schlager" party bar with Swiss and German music at the top of the hill.

See our map & listings pages for more restaurant and cafe suggestions, including Hiltl, a vegetarian restaurant here since 1898, nurtured for four generations by the family of Ambrosius Hiltl, the son of a Bavarian farmer and travelling tailor by trade, who arrived in Zurich at the age of 20.

Behave (anything but straight) at Frieda's Büxe (Spitalgasse 5), lively gay/straight-friendly Tech-House, Deep-House and Electro now and then Friday dance parties -- normally August through June, but have been inactive of late.

Heldenbar at Provitreff (Sihlquai 240), mid-week queer, non-profit, live music space, party nights, hang-out for mixed group of gay/les/bi/hetero, mostly young people. Find it upriver from Hauptbahnhof.

Inside Party, gay and friends House/Trance party dance night, previously at Stairs, reopened at Q-Club (Förrlibuckstrasse 151) for late 2017 events. See Gun Oil sponsor site for future dates.

Offstream every now and then Electro music LGBTQ and friends dance party at various clubs; Exil (Hardstrasse 245), and Papiersaal (Kalanderplatz 6) among them.

CLOSED:Stairs Club (Baslerstrasse 50), gay/mixed weekend lounge/dance club lost their lease. The Jack and Wonderworld parties are now inactive.

Ministry of Kink (Engelstrasse 62), "the gay lifestyle company" has clothing, leather, rubber, army gear, toys, and DVDs for all interests. Also a wide variety of piercing jewelry, books, and magazines.

Gay Zurich

Switzerland's Capital Cool

I must be dreaming. I'm in a German city where everyone speaks German, as one would expect. And yet they all seem so French, preoccupied as they are with sensual pleasures and relaxation.
These so-called Germans savor food and drink at a languorous pace on sprawling outdoor patios. In the French fashion, the wines are dry and the breads are sweet. In Germany, as everyone knows, it's the wines that are sweet and the breads, so very dry.
True, the city is squeaky clean in the German tradition, and the trams and trains run on time, down to the second. But something is amiss. The real giveaway that I am in Zurich, Switzerland's largest city, lies in a detail that would seem unforgivably foreign in the fatherland: everyone smiles.
On the surface, Switzerland is quite neatly divided, almost balkanized, into its German, French and Italian pieces. Most Swiss Germans don't speak much French, although I'm told this is sometimes merely an affectation. Stereotypes are not far below the surface for both groups. The French accuse the Germans of being serious and dull. The Germans will sometimes say the French are lazy: the industrious Germans earn all the money for the Swiss, they say, but the French, with their addiction to elaborate social schemes, are quick to spend it.
Still, the cultures have lent more to one another than some Swiss would like to admit. This seems most evident in Zurich, the country's most cosmopolitan city, where Swiss Germans have developed their own style, one that owes plenty to their Latin confreres. It's a combination perhaps best expressed in Switzerland's most celebrated crafts: the precision of clockmakers meets the gourmet concerns of cheesemakers and the decadence of the chocolatiers. Zurich may have a reputation as a highly efficient financial hub, but the city is also a sensualist's playground.
Much of the city's relaxed spirit finds its focus on the water. Zurich is situated on a lake entirely surrounded by lush parks. Fresh, clear water flows into the lake from glaciers in the Alps, which provide a picturesque backdrop to the city. Boats are plentiful. The Limmat, the river that flows from the lake through the historic city centre, is banked by pedestrian promenades and outdoor bars and cafes.
Lakeside, people sprawl on the expansive lawns or the huge square docks built out into the water. The docks, like picture frames, surround swimming pool-sized holes, making it easy to take a refreshing dip. There are several of these pools, including one each for gay men (at Tiefenbrunnen) and bare-breasted lesbians (on the Limmat). At night, DJs set up booths and the docks transform into outdoor nightclubs.

PARTY DESTINATION
Zurich is a party destination for European gay men. The city is known for its relaxed attitudes to the pleasures of sex, drugs and electronica. As in most places, such easy living has been hard fought and won.
Zurich's sex appeal was threatened by a police crackdown on darkrooms two years ago. "The police closed down a bar because they had a darkroom and argued in front of a court that it was illegal," says Pierre Rosselet, co-president of Pink Cross, the national gay men's advocacy group, itself an umbrella for dozens of regional chapters and smaller organizations. Rosselet, a lawyer by day, helped to successfully challenge the ruling, which was overturned last year.
"The first court said, yes, it's illegal. But then the supreme court of the state of Zurich ruled that a darkroom was legal if certain precautions were taken." Darkrooms and saunas once again flourish in the city. Of the victory, Rosselet says, "We are very happy and proud."

Electronic dance music fans flock to the city, particularly for the annual Streetparade, a citywide dance party with a definite gay vibe. Each August, every square inch of public space in Zurich is transformed into a disco. A roving party of club kids and drag queens in dayglo costumes flows through the streets while each of the city's many public squares becomes an outdoor dance club. Makeshift dance floors pop up everywhere: in parks, on boats and even in the giant main hall of the Hauptbahnhof, the central train station. The chief of police tried to ban the parade in 1994 but ultimately caved in the face of massive protests. These days, the city of Zurich is a major force behind the festival and, true to its sophisticated reputation, it even distributes information on how to avoid purchasing bad party drugs.

SWISS PRAGMATISM
Switzerland's drug laws are among the most progressive in the world, Claude Janiak tells me. Janiak is a Swiss senator who, as the former president of the Swiss national assembly, was the country's first openly gay head of state. He has worked successfully in favor of drug decriminalization, immigration reform and gay civil unions. Janiak says the country's progressive legislation is simply a function of Swiss pragmatism.
"The Swiss drug policy," he says, "is an example of what I call the realpolitik. Fifteen years ago, they started with the program that the state gave the heroin to the people. And so the small criminality went down because [drug users] didn't have to steal money. I mean, the police have better things to do than to run after people with drugs." These days, while trafficking laws remain, possession of drugs - all drugs - has been decriminalized. This freedom is balanced with tough laws against driving under the influence. It's a bold approach that has inspired Germany to implement similar drug reforms.

Janiak also fought for gay civil unions. A bill was passed in 2004, but opponents collected the requisite 50,000 signatures to force a national referendum on the issue the following year. Janiak says he was not worried the law would be repealed. "I was quite sure that we would win it, because in the parliament it was approved largely.
"In Switzerland, normally such questions which concern the society, abortion for example, people are very realistic. So they know that there are abortions, and they prefer that it is legal and it's done in the hospital and not I-don't-know-where. Regarding gays and lesbians, people know that there are gays and lesbians," he laughs. Sure enough, the referendum approved gay civil unions by a large majority. It was the first time in the world that gay partnership rights were bestowed, not by a legislature, but directly by a country's citizens.

Corine Mauch, Zurich's chic lesbian mayor, was not so confident. "I was skeptical, I must say," she says. "I was very astonished when it passed with almost two-thirds of the people saying yes in Switzerland. This for me really was a signal; we have made large progress during the last three years." She is equally pleased that her lesbianism was not a negative factor in last year's mayoralty campaign. "I was elected with a very good result," she says. "For me this proved it's not an issue for the population of Zurich." Mauch was a member of parliament before becoming mayor. Before that, she was a bass player in a rock band. Now, she's working to make Zurich a greener city. "We have fixed in our city constitution our goal to be a sustainable city," she says. It's a goal that comes with ambitious self-imposed standards and deadlines. The city recently built a highway around itself, to keep traffic from entering the city and encourage transit use instead.

One can get anywhere quickly and effortlessly via Zurich's transit system. Trams run constantly, often on dedicated streets, and tram connections are breathtakingly precise. But when I suggest to Mauch that Zurich already seems to have a perfect transit system, she expresses great surprise, "No, we don't!" "The starting point is good," she concedes, "but we have to realize it still." This realization involves a little social engineering to alter habits. "We really want to force people to take the way around the city," she says.
Thanks to the smarts and efforts of Switzerland's progressive gay and lesbian politicians and activists, Zurich stands to become still less polluted, more efficient, more relaxed and a lot sexier.

GETTING AROUND
Swiss International Airlines (swiss.com) is exactly what you'd expect from its namesake: an efficient and comforting way to make your way across the ocean. Service is meaningfully engaging and details are managed properly. Tyler Brele, the gay Canadian founder of Wallpaper and Monocle magazines, oversaw the airline's makeover a few years back.
Once you've arrived, a Swiss rail pass (sbb.ch/en) is a shockingly affordable way to get around, even in first class. Restaurants tend to be somewhat pricey across the land, but the quality of food is generally high. Hotels are expensive in Zurich, but they generally offer many free services, like breakfasts that eliminate the need for lunch, which help mitigate the cost.

WHERE TO STAY
Zurich hotels divide roughly into two camps: traditional Swiss charm and ubermodern sleek and stylish. In the former camp, the Alden (alden.ch) is the best example. Built in 1895, the hotel's exterior resembles a miniature palace. Inside, there are just 22 rooms and suites, each one unique. Rooms are cozy but never twee, with an emphasis on elaborate spa-like bathrooms. They offer free old-school services like shoe shining, and the daily breakfast is an elaborate affair that includes serve-yourself Champagne. On the sleek front, the new Park Hyatt (zurich.park.hyatt.com) is a marvel. The shiny dark exterior is minimalist perfection, making a nice backdrop for drinks or dinner from the sidewalk patio. The lobby lounge's vaulted ceilings and massive modern fireplace make the indoor option equally delightful.